CITYLIFE / Eating Out |
Poetry to the mouth(smartshanghai.com)Updated: 2006-12-22 10:05 Growing up as a Canadian Japanese I would have to say that I was pretty friggin' ( I think I'm not allowed to swear in the restaurant reviews) lucky to develop a taste and understanding of both worlds. You see, I grew up with my father being away from home for months and with a mother who didn't enjoy cooking. For this reason, I was the one slaving in the kitchen after school for the family. I didn't know how to cook Japanese at the time so I tried to cook everything else. Italian, Mexican, Thai, Indian and whatever else was on the cooking show. But during the days that my father was home, we always ate Japanese. My mother had to cook whether she liked it or not or my father being a creative genius in the kitchen would always dish out some high quality yummy Japanese food. The results, the ultimate Western Japanese food critique in Shanghai. Let it be fusion, experimental, traditional or all out Japanese made for westerners. My palette is divine! So as you can imagine, Vince and Diana from Haiku sitting across from me was
now more than a little nervous about the dinner. Plus I walked into the
restaurant all flustered and in a bad mood. But I underestimated them. As soon
as I sat down, I got a serving of their signature hot sake Nenohi. The quality
of it being good it had a slight sweetness to it and went down smoothly and
chilled me out right away. Phew. I needed that. You know you need to chill out
when your boyfriend is sending you "C-A-L-M-D-O-W-N" in Morse code under the
table with every squeeze of his hand. Vince told us a little bit about himself
and how Haiku came to Shanghai. I noticed that he had more than the average
appreciation and understanding for Japanese food. He knew how things were made
and how they should taste. He even knew every each fish name in Japanese. Now I
understood why the owner of Hatsune (Beijing) trusted Vince to bring it down to
Shanghai. And I must thank Vince and Diana for this night because after the four bottles of wine plus the hot sake, I was so horny I had to stand on my hands and pee! But my bf and I had a very very nice night after! Thank you! And why did we drink four bottles? Awesome hosts but also the wine list was very nice. For all you boys out there who are looking to take a girl out on a nice date, Haiku is perfect, not only because of the food but the also the wine. For example, we had a bottle of Hugel Gewurtztraminer, definitely a ladies wine sweet, light and fruity. Also the desert wine, the Concha y Toro Late Harvest Sauvignon Blanc, the ladies will love! And yes I know, the desert wine is usually where you end the dinner but my bf was having such a nice time, we decided to order a bottle of red the Bouchard Bourgogne Pinot. And all these wines, between 200 and 400 rmb. Not bad huh. So since it was my first time doing a review on a Japanese restaurant I wanted to be quite a critique (being a bitch also helps too). But to be honest, I personally love this restaurant. The food, the people, and the drink list. Top notch for its price. Ok, ok I can't end this review with no critiques. Hawaiian shirts on the boys behind the bar, that's gotta go, they need hair cuts too (send them to me) the yellow hanging lights, too bright. But besides this, the decor's not bad! Very chill with floor to roof glass into the garden behind. So different from when it was Vision. Anyways, hope this review was ok. I had lots of fun writing it! And if anybody else wants to invite me to try out their restaurant, I'd be more than happy too! Just hope your food is good or I'll tear it apart! He he!! Haiku is Japanese poem composed of three non-rhyming lines. Haiku by hatsune |
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